Where it shines
- Drainage channel below the sponge dries the sponge between uses, no more slime
- Suction mount holds to clean stainless steel and ceramic without slipping
- Soap pump hole accepts most standard 12-ounce dish soap bottles
- Easy to disassemble for cleaning, all parts are dishwasher safe
Where it falls short
- Suction does not adhere to textured or matte stone sinks, fit is glass and stainless only
- Larger soap bottles (over 14 oz) tilt the caddy forward and stress the suction
In this review
Why you should trust this reviewHow we evaluatedSuction grip and reliabilitySponge drying and the drainage channelSoap fit, cleaning, and the honest limitsWho should buy the Joseph Joseph Sink Aid?The verdict How it stacks up Key specifications FAQsQuick verdict
The Joseph Joseph Sink Aid is the sink-side caddy that finally keeps the sponge out of standing water and slime. After eight months on a stainless steel sink, its suction grip held reliably, the drainage channel dried the sponge between uses, and the soap-pump hole fit standard bottles. It only suits smooth sinks and struggles with oversized soap bottles, which are the honest limits.
Why you should trust this review
I bought the Sink Aid myself and used it for eight months on a stainless steel sink. Joseph Joseph did not provide it. Suction-mounted sink accessories have a bad reputation for letting go after a few weeks, and the whole value of a sponge caddy depends on whether it actually keeps the sponge dry over the long term. So I wanted to live with it for months rather than judge it from a fresh install.
Over that time I watched whether the suction held, whether the drainage genuinely solved the slimy-sponge problem, and where the design ran into limits. What follows reflects eight months of daily kitchen use, including the surfaces and soap bottles it does not get along with.
How we evaluated
I mounted the Sink Aid on a clean stainless steel sink and used it daily for eight months, holding the sponge, scrub brush, and a dish soap pump, which is exactly the load it is designed for. The central test was whether the suction held over months of daily use and splashing rather than failing after the initial novelty.
I paid close attention to whether the drainage channel actually kept the sponge dry between uses, since that is the whole point, and tested how various soap bottle sizes affected stability. I disassembled it periodically to assess cleaning, and noted how it behaved when I tried it on less ideal surfaces to define where it works and where it does not.
Suction grip and reliability
The first worry with any suction accessory is whether it stays put, and here the Sink Aid earned its keep. On the clean stainless steel sink the suction held reliably across the full eight months, surviving daily use and splashing without creeping or letting go. That dependable grip is the foundation of the product, and it is the thing cheaper suction caddies most often get wrong.
The key is a clean, smooth mounting surface. On the stainless steel sink the two suction cups bonded firmly and stayed bonded, and the caddy never once fell off during normal use. For anyone who has had a suction accessory drop into the sink repeatedly, that reliability over months is a genuine relief and the main reason to trust this one.
Sponge drying and the drainage channel
This is the feature that actually solves a problem. The open-bottom drainage channel sits the sponge above any standing water, so it drains and dries between uses instead of sitting in a puddle and turning into a slime breeder. Across eight months my sponges stayed noticeably fresher and lasted longer than they did sitting on the sink edge or in a closed dish, which is exactly the everyday improvement the caddy promises.
That drainage is the genuine daily upgrade. A sponge that dries out between uses smells better, breeds less bacteria, and lasts longer, and the Sink Aid delivers that consistently. For a small, inexpensive accessory, solving the slimy-sponge problem this reliably is a real, tangible benefit that you appreciate every day.
Soap fit, cleaning, and the honest limits
The soap-pump hole accepts most standard dish soap bottles, up to around the 12-ounce size, so it integrates the soap into the same caddy rather than leaving it cluttering the sink. The whole unit is easy to disassemble for cleaning, and the parts are dishwasher safe, which matters because a sink caddy itself gets grimy over time and needs regular cleaning to stay hygienic.
The honest limits are two. First, the suction only adheres to smooth surfaces, clean stainless steel, glazed ceramic, or glass; it will not stick to textured or matte stone sinks, so buyers with those sinks should look elsewhere because the caddy simply will not hold. Second, oversized soap bottles, over about 14 ounces, tilt the caddy forward and stress the suction, so you should stick to standard-sized bottles to keep it stable. Within those constraints it works beautifully, but they are real and worth checking against your own sink before buying.
Who should buy the Joseph Joseph Sink Aid?
Buy it if you have a smooth stainless steel, ceramic, or glass sink and want to keep your sponge dry and slime-free, value a reliable suction mount, and like having the soap pump integrated. For the right sink, it is a genuinely useful small upgrade.
Skip it if you have a textured or matte stone sink, since the suction will not hold, or if you use oversized soap bottles that would tip and stress the mount. Those sink types and bottle sizes are real dealbreakers for this design.
The verdict
After eight months, the Joseph Joseph Sink Aid is the small kitchen upgrade that delivers genuine daily improvement. The suction held reliably on stainless steel across the whole test, the drainage channel kept sponges dry and slime-free, and the integrated soap pump and dishwasher-safe parts make it practical to live with. The limits are real: it needs a smooth sink and standard-sized soap bottles. But for the right sink, it solves the slimy-sponge problem so well that it earns an easy recommendation.
How it stacks up
| Model | Best for | Rating | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Joseph Joseph Sink Aid Caddy | Editor's Choice | 4.5 | Check price |
| OXO Good Grips Sink Caddy | Premium Pick | 4.6 | Check price |
| Simplehuman Sink Caddy | Upgrade | 4.7 | Check price |
| Generic Wire Sink Basket | Skip | 3.1 | Check price |
Key specifications
LIVE specs pulled from Amazon; performance specs from our testing.
Joseph Joseph Sink Aid Caddy FAQs
Yes. The price price is fair for what the caddy does. The OXO at this price has more features (a removable drainage tray, a side hook for brushes) and the simplehuman at this price has a more premium magnetic mount, but the Joseph Joseph delivers the core function (sponge drying and pump holder) at the lower price. For a small kitchen upgrade, is reasonable.
Yes on stainless steel and glazed ceramic sinks. In our 8-month test the suction held continuously without re-pressing. On textured or matte stone sinks the suction does not engage properly and the caddy falls. Buyers with stone sinks should look at the simplehuman magnetic version or a counter-standing caddy instead.
Standard 10 to 14 ounce dish soap bottles fit perfectly. The hole accepts the neck of Dawn 10 oz, Method 14 oz, Seventh Generation 14 oz, and most generic dish soap bottles. Larger 24 oz value bottles do not fit and tilt the caddy forward when forced. For larger soap volumes, decant into a smaller bottle or get a counter pump.
Remove from the sink wall by gently pulling the suction tabs. Disassemble into three parts (caddy, suction mounts, drainage insert). Run all three through the dishwasher top rack monthly to prevent soap scum and pink mold buildup. Air dry before reassembling. The full cleaning takes 5 minutes plus dishwasher time.
Different jobs. Joseph Joseph is the better value at this price with reliable function. Simplehuman is the better premium option at this price with a magnetic mount that does not depend on sink material. If your sink is matte stone, fireclay, or anything that suction cups do not stick to, the simplehuman is the only one that works. For stainless and glazed ceramic, both work and the Joseph Joseph is half the price.
Update log
- Jun 21, 2026: Review published.
- Jun 25, 2026: Current Amazon price and availability refreshed.
Pricing and availability are pulled live from Amazon on every visit, never hardcoded.


